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Definitions

divagate

[dahy-vuh-geyt] / ˈdaɪ vəˌgeɪt /
VERB
stray
Synonyms
Antonyms
STRONG
be direct stay


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It’s one thing to go public with concerns about corporate taxes or tariffs, quite another to divagate into divisive political issues such as global warming or anti-LGBTQ discrimination.

From Los Angeles Times

"Egoism is merely another name for the expression of a vital need," he said, after the divagating pause, defining the word more for his own satisfaction than in self-defense.

From Project Gutenberg

For a set scheduled to start at 10, the singer, who had spent much of the day divagating about what to wear onstage, appeared around midnight.

From New York Times

And the upshot is that the theistic determinist is never merciful, whereas the rational determinist is at least under a logical compulsion to be so, however he may resist or divagate.

From Project Gutenberg

If it can be done in prose—that is the puzzle—I divagate again.

From Project Gutenberg